差点儿忘了 kellyanne Conway, 她是最容易撤掉的,目前也是最影响公众影响的。
You're fired! The HUGE list of people President Donald Trump has tossed to the curb
Posted August 18, 2017 at 07:30 PM | Updated August 18, 2017 at 08:03 PM
By Matt Arco | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
(President Donald Trump file photo, Jim Watsonjim/Getty Images)
He was synonymous with the two words "you're fired!" when he was a reality TV star before running for public office.
So why wouldn't President
Donald Trump be good at kicking people to the curb of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue after being elected commander in chief?
Here's the list of people pushed out of Trump's White House and inner circle, whether by resignation or a good ole firing, since the billionaire businessman launched his campaign.
(AP Photo)
Stephen Bannon
The White House chief strategist is the latest person to be shown the door.
Calls for the controversial adviser, who prior to joining Trump's campaign ran the news outlet Breitbart, the voice of the alt-right, to be pushed out hit a fever pitch after violence broke out in Charlottesville, Va.
Lawmakers mentioned Bannon as they criticized Trump for his delayed response condemning the far-right, followed by his doubling down that both sides were at fault, instead of singling out the white supremacists and neo-Nazis.
His ouster comes after he
gave a colorful interview with a progressive magazine he thought was off the record. In it, he said there's "no military solution" in North Korea, and people at departments of state and defense were "wetting themselves" because he wanted to neutralize his opponents within the agencies.
(AP Photo)
James Comey
Trump rocked the political world when he canned the former FBI director in May. At the time, Comey was heading the investigation into the Trump campaign's possible collusion with Russia in the 2016 campaign.
(AP Photo)
Paul Manafort
Speaking of Russians, Trump's former campaign chairman was ousted in August after he increasingly came under attacks over his past lobbying work for pro-Russian Ukrainian oligarchs.
(AP Photo)
Michael Flynn
Flynn was let go less than a month into his job as the president's national security adviser.
He was forced out of the White House in February after it became clear he had conversations about sanctions with Russian officials prior to the inauguration, while President Barack Obama still occupied the Oval Office, and then misled Vice President Mike Pence about the conversations.
(Getty Images)
Sean Spicer
The embattled press secretary was reportedly walking on egg shells for months. There were reports that Trump wanted Spicer out, but he kept doing his job. The dam broke in July after Trump told Spicer he hired Anthony Scaramucci as White House communications director.
Spicer told the president he vehemently disagreed with his decision and resigned.
(Getty Images)
Anthony Scaramucci
As communications director, Scaramucci holds the unfortunate title of serving the shortest tenure in the Trump White House. In fact, he was fired 10 days before his official start date.
Scaramucci was fired in July after he gave an expletive-filled interview with The New Yorker that blasted members of Trump's administration. Scaramucci later said he thought the interview was off the record.
After he was sacked, he told Steven Colbert: "I thought I'd last longer than carton of milk."
Reince Priebus
Spicer wasn't the only person to leave the White House over a feud with Scaramucci.
Priebus served as Trump's chief-of-staff for about six months before he was pushed out after Scaramucci was hired. Like Spicer, numerous reports suggested Priebus' time was limited.
But after Scaramucci told The New Yorker the then-chief of staff was a “(expletive) paranoid schizophrenic" and a "paranoiac," Priebus was soon shown the door.
(AP Photo)
Katie Walsh
The former deputy chief of staff bailed on the job after serving under Priebus for only three months. She worked under Priebus at the Republican National Committee, where she again works.
Sally Yates
The acting attorney general, who was an Obama appointee, was fired after she refused to uphold the Trump administration's controversial travel ban in January.
(Getty Images)
Preet Bharara
After Yates refusal to heed Trump's order, the administration moved to oust 46 of the U.S. attorneys Obama appointed.
However, Bharara, who Trump personally asked to stay on shortly after the election, refused to step down. He was promptly fired by the president.
(AP Photo)
Corey Lewandowski
Like Manafort, Lewandowski's ouster goes back to the president's campaign.
Lewandowski's departure in June 2016 marked the first major staff shakeup at the time. He was let go as his campaign appeared to be struggling after becoming the presumptive GOP nominee.
Walter Shaub Jr.
He was the former director of the Office of Government Ethics. He resigned in July after repeated clashes with Trump over the president's complicated financial holdings.
Michael Dubke
The former communications director resigned in May to make room for Scaramucci.
Kenneth Frazier
The chairman and CEO of New Jersey-based Merk pharmaceuticals was not pushed out of Trump's circle. Instead, Frazier resigned in protest from one of Trump's economic councils after the president's tepid response to the violence in Charlottesville.
Two economic councils
Soon after Frazier resigned, other members of two of the economic councils followed.
So what did Trump do? He took to Twitter to announce he was disbanding the American Manufacturing Council and the Strategic and Policy Forum.
(AP Photo)
Chris Christie
Don't forget New Jersey's very own Gov. Chris Christie, who was booted as Trump's transition chief after the president won the election.
In limbo
Some haven't been fired. Instead, Trump has put them in a state of limbo, suggesting in news reports or on Twitter that their jobs could be in jeopardy.
(AP Photo)
Robert Mueller
Mueller was brought on by the Justice Department to serve as special counsel in the probe of any possible ties between Trump's campaign and Russia. Trump
told The New York Times in July that if Mueller's scope of inquiry moves into investigating his family's finances that it would cross a line.
Jeff Sessions
Furious with Sessions for hiring Mueller as special counsel, Trump has repeatedly berated his attorney general on Twitter and said he would never have tapped him to serve in the position if he knew ahead of time that Session would recuse himself from the investigation.
Sessions was forced to recuse himself from the Russia investigation after it emerged that he failed at his confirmation hearing to disclose two pre-election meetings with Russia's ambassador to Washington, at a time when Moscow was accused of interfering in the presidential race.